This adds roccat-tools and one required dependency (libgaminggear),
which I had laying around since June 2016 but never submitted upstream
until now.
The tools are required if you want to configure one of the hardware
devices from the manufactorer ROCCAT.
Builds for both have been tested against i686-linux, x86_64-linux and
aarch64-linux.
I had this package along with libgaminggear laying around since June
2016[1] and basically just did the setup for the ROCCAT device once and
never touched it again since then. However, I got requests from other
users who might need this, so I decided to finally upstream it along
with using the latest versions.
There were a few hardcoded paths to fix, like eg. /etc/xdg and another
one that used /var/lib/roccat, the latter I moved into $XDG_DATA_HOME
instead.
The reason why I put it in os-specific/linux is that the official site
explicitly states that it's for Linux only and I specified the platforms
attribute accordingly.
[1]: https://gist.github.com/aszlig/3a01c0c23254a68c2be4c6df59e26862
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Cc: @devhell
This is a requirement for roccat-tools, which is going to be introduced
soon.
The reason why I'm using propagatedBuildInputs here is because the
pkg-config file lists *all* of the dependencies in Requires and
Requires.private, so those libraries are needed whenever any software
uses that library.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@nix.build>
Before, providers were only built indirectly. Since proviers don't
depend on terraform to build they can be moved into their own collection
of packages. This also has the advantage that they can be reached
directly using an attribute path (Eg: terraform-providers.nixos).
Co-authored-by: Wael Nasreddine <wael.nasreddine@gmail.com>
Using a simple algorithm, convert the references to a path in to a
sorted list of dependent paths based on how often they're referenced
and how deep in the tree they live. Equally-"popular" paths are then
sorted by name.
The existing writeReferencesToFile prints the paths in a simple
ascii-based sorting of the paths.
Sorting the paths by graph improves the chances that the difference
between two builds appear near the end of the list, instead of near
the beginning. This makes a difference for Nix builds which export a
closure for another program to consume, if that program implements its
own level of binary diffing.
For an example, Docker Images. If each store path is a separate layer
then Docker Images can be very efficiently transfered between systems,
and we get very good cache reuse between images built with the same
version of Nixpkgs. However, since Docker only reliably supports a
small number of layers (42) it is important to pick the individual
layers carefully. By storing very popular store paths in the first 40
layers, we improve the chances that the next Docker image will share
many of those layers.*
Given the dependency tree:
A - B - C - D -\
\ \ \ \
\ \ \ \
\ \ - E ---- F
\- G
Nodes which have multiple references are duplicated:
A - B - C - D - F
\ \ \
\ \ \- E - F
\ \
\ \- E - F
\
\- G
Each leaf node is now replaced by a counter defaulted to 1:
A - B - C - D - (F:1)
\ \ \
\ \ \- E - (F:1)
\ \
\ \- E - (F:1)
\
\- (G:1)
Then each leaf counter is merged with its parent node, replacing the
parent node with a counter of 1, and each existing counter being
incremented by 1. That is to say `- D - (F:1)` becomes `- (D:1, F:2)`:
A - B - C - (D:1, F:2)
\ \ \
\ \ \- (E:1, F:2)
\ \
\ \- (E:1, F:2)
\
\- (G:1)
Then each leaf counter is merged with its parent node again, merging
any counters, then incrementing each:
A - B - (C:1, D:2, E:2, F:5)
\ \
\ \- (E:1, F:2)
\
\- (G:1)
And again:
A - (B:1, C:2, D:3, E:4, F:8)
\
\- (G:1)
And again:
(A:1, B:2, C:3, D:4, E:5, F:9, G:2)
and then paths have the following "popularity":
A 1
B 2
C 3
D 4
E 5
F 9
G 2
and the popularity contest would result in the paths being printed as:
F
E
D
C
B
G
A
* Note: People who have used a Dockerfile before assume Docker's
Layers are inherently ordered. However, this is not true -- Docker
layers are content-addressable and are not explicitly layered until
they are composed in to an Image.
Thanks to @symphorien for this work, which apart from the update itself
includes a few more fixes and cleanups.
I've tested building and running the upgraded Paperwork and while I
haven't done extensive testing on every little feature it seems to work
so far.
The changes also include an addition to fetchFromGitLab, which allows to
specify a group.
Merges: #46487
* needs at least qtgraphicaleffects not mentioned in docs
* doesn't want to use our libqmatrixclient, so let it use bundled
* took a few runs (or perhaps just patience with one) to populate,
when my profile icon appeared it seemed ready-- then click it
to see list of rooms and such.
- New dependency on 'getconf' binary for
3aa619e9ef/src/vm_memory_monitor.erl (L448)
- New dependency on 'socat' for systemd notifications
4a3ee3a336/src/rabbit.erl (L361)
- elixir_1_6 for a new 'rabbitmqctl' tool
- Replace patching with providing custom PATH, as we already have some
other things here
- Renamed package in all-packages.nix from a legacy spelling
This includes the initialy commit was done by @Mic92 plus a few fixes
from my side. So essentially this avoids patching statically linked
executables and also speeds up searching for ELF files altogether.
I've tested this by comparing the outputs of all the derivations which
make use of this hook using the following Nix expression:
let
getPackagesForRev = rev: with import (builtins.fetchGit {
url = ./.;
inherit rev;
}) { config.allowUnfree = true; }; [
cups-kyodialog3 elasticsearch franz gurobi javacard-devkit
masterpdfeditor maxx oracle-instantclient powershell reaper
teamviewer unixODBCDrivers.msodbcsql17 virtlyst wavebox zoom-us
];
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
baseRev = "ef764eb0d8314b81a012dae04642b4766199956d";
in pkgs.runCommand "diff-contents" {
chset = pkgs.lib.zipListsWith (old: new: pkgs.runCommand "diff" {
inherit old new;
nativeBuildInputs = [ pkgs.nukeReferences ];
} ''
mkdir -p "''${NIX_STORE#/}"
cp --no-preserve=all -r "$old" "''${NIX_STORE#/}"
cp --no-preserve=all -r "$new" "''${NIX_STORE#/}"
find "''${old#/}" "''${new#/}" \
\( -type f -exec nuke-refs {} + \) -o \( -type l -delete \)
mkdir "$out"
echo "$old" > "$out/old-path"
echo "$new" > "$out/new-path"
diff -Nur "''${old#/}" "''${new#/}" > "$out/diff" || :
'') (getPackagesForRev baseRev) (getPackagesForRev "");
} ''
err=0
for c in $chset; do
if [ -s "$c/diff" ]; then
echo "$(< "$c/old-path") -> $(< "$c/new-path")" \
"differs, report: $c/diff" >&2
err=1
fi
done
[ $err -eq 0 ] && touch "$out"
''
With these changes there is only one derivation which has altered
contents, which is "franz". However the reason why it has differing
contents is not directly because of the autoPatchelfHook changes, but
because the "env-vars" file from the builder is in
"$out/opt/franz/env-vars" (Cc: @gnidorah) and we now have different
contents for NIX_CFLAGS_COMPILE and other environment variables.
I also tested this against a random static binary and the hook no longer
tries to patch it.
Merges: #47222
This isn't necessary and causes build failures for certain versions.
CC libavfilter/libmpcodecs/vf_eq2.o
CC libavfilter/libmpcodecs/vf_fil.o
CC libavfilter/libmpcodecs/vf_fspp.o
libavfilter/libmpcodecs/vf_fspp.c:939:18: error: unknown token in expression
movq %mm2, 0*8+(%rsp)
/cc ZHF #45961
Add package libratbag and service module ratbagd
Libratbag contains ratbagd daemon and ratbagctl cli to configure
buttons, dpi, leds, etc. of gaming mice.
Add mvnetbiz to maintainers.
This package providesa completion input method for faster typing.
See https://mike-fabian.github.io/ibus-typing-booster
Detailed instructions how to activate this IBus engine on your desktop
can be found in the upstream docs: https://mike-fabian.github.io/ibus-typing-booster/documentation.html
A simple VM with the Gnome3 desktop and activated `ibus' looks like
this:
```nix
{
emojipicker = { pkgs, ... }: {
services.xserver = {
enable = true;
desktopManager.gnome3.enable = true;
desktopManager.xterm.enable = false;
};
users.extraUsers.vm = {
password = "vm";
isNormalUser = true;
};
i18n.inputMethod.ibus.engines = [
pkgs.ibus-engines.typing-booster
];
i18n.inputMethod.enabled = "ibus";
virtualisation.memorySize = 2048;
};
}
```
Fixes#38721
Qt 5.11 was downgraded to 5.9 because of two issues:
- spawns errors like
```
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:20:9: QML BusyIndicator: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
qrc:/qml/SignInWaiting.qml:26:9: QML Text: Detected anchors on an item that is managed by a layout. This is undefined behavior; use Layout.alignment instead.
```
- Google login doesn't work. It just doesn't start embedded webbrowser
A little shim derivation to get this header for Darwin, where it is
needed for cross compilation.
There's no real reason to do glibc and musl like that, but as I'm
maintaining it I suppose I can go overboard like that.
morituri has been dead for a while now and uses gst-python which is
no longer supported wth Python 2. whipper is a maintained fork,
packaged, for example, in Arch.
Looks CoreFoundation related.
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"_CFURLResourceIsReachable", referenced from:
fsevent_sys::core_foundation::str_path_to_cfstring_ref::h0ea4bd94e2c613f2 in libfsevent_sys-ef30b6879660a6c1.rlib(fsevent_sys-ef30b6879660a6c1.fsevent_sys7-49ce33334334dd3a5c7883bf4070f954.rs.rcgu.o)
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
/cc ZHF #45961
The build expression got quiet large over time and to make it a bit
easier to grasp the different scripts involved in the build are now
separated from the nix file.
The examples fail with an opengl related issue:
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"SimpleOpenGL3App::SimpleOpenGL3App(char const*, int, int, bool)", referenced from:
_main in main_opengl_single_example.o
"_useShadowMap", referenced from:
GL_ShapeDrawer::drawScene(btDiscreteDynamicsWorld const*, bool, int) in GL_ShapeDrawer.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
And the tests need an extra dependencly, possibley related to
https://github.com/bulletphysics/bullet3/issues/819
ld: library not found for -lBussIK
/cc ZHF #45961
Create the top-level packages attribute
'hylafaxplus' that builds HylaFAX+ .
Note:
The nobody uid and the nogroup gid
are hardcoded in the package.
The package build recipe file
contains options to modify these ids.